Thread on the media’s longtime failure to cover white supremacist terrorism with the urgency it should have. From 2018-2019, I was trying to write a book about this very topic, so after the Christchurch massacre, I must have pitched 10-15 publications something along these lines:
Most passed. In the aftermath of an attack like that, there is always a brief glut of coverage. It seemed the editors I pitched wanted their own writers—who rarely specialized in terrorism—to join the fray with some quick hits. They were not interested in a more in-depth feature.
Finally @washingtonpost took the pitch, but asked for it in argument format instead of a feature. Here’s what I wrote: washingtonpost.com/news/postevery…
It wasn't my original idea. I wanted something broader and more in-depth, but I was grateful to place it. I interviewed Joel Finkelstein of @ncri_io for the WaPo piece and he had a quote, especially chilling in hindsight, that never made it into the story:
Soon after the publication of that piece, I finished my book proposal, and my agent pitched it around. This was part of the overview. There was some interest, but we were well into Trumpmania by that point, and the environment was terrible for selling this kind of book.
I kept getting the feedback from publishers that it was “too depressing,” that people wanted to read books that cheered them up and entertained them. This was definitely not that kind of book. After many attempts, I dropped the project, thoroughly dejected.
I knew this was a danger that would keep emerging. I wanted to warn people. I had never done any TV, but I was asked to partner with a small production company, so I thought I'd pitch it as a docu-series. Here’s part of that proposal. No one seemed interested. I set that aside.
Contrast this lack of interest in what was clearly becoming a huge threat, with the absolute frenzy of material and coverage about Islamist terrorism during peak ISIS years. This was part of the reason I decided to take a break from journalism and focus on my family for a while.
I felt like I had worked so hard on these projects, I wanted to warn people, but no one was listening.
As I saw what happened at the Capitol unfold and watched the coverage of "protesters," I immediately noticed: 1) most of them were obvious white supremacists and 2) some had clearly received military training and were executing what I immediately recognized as an operation.
I knew this day would eventually come. I tweeted about it. I think I was probably one of the first reporters to insist on calling it terrorism. But by the time people caught on, it was too late.
My point in tweeting all this is that the media had many opportunities to cover this the way it should have been, for several years now. I'm sure I'm not the only journalist to unsuccessfully pitch this subject matter. We need to do better to warn the public of such threats. End.
PS: someone pointed out that maybe they wouldn't pub me because a smear piece by some rando conspiracy trolls was somehow hitting number 1 on my Google search results at the time. To that, I'll just ask if men with my qualifications would be passed over for such an absurd reason.

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More from @SulomeAnderson

13 Jan
A thread on why I have thought it over, and come to the opinion that rhetorical comparisons between domestic terrorist groups currently threatening our country and MENA terrorist groups are ultimately unhelpful. I have done this before, and one can analytically inform the other.
For example, it makes sense to use analysis of the ISIS recruitment and training process to understand the worst of these groups. Why? Because some white supremacist terrorists themselves are actively aware of that comparison and emulating jihadism, such as neo-Nazis the Base.
But ISIS was born in the aftermath of war and invasion. So was Hezbollah. Nazi terrorists aren't like Hezbollah. They're worse, in many ways, because they have no reason to be as they are. Hezbollah is its own kind of terrible, but it's the kind of terrible birthed by war.
Read 4 tweets
9 Jan
Every hair on my body is standing straight up after reading this...it has not sunk in for many of you what it will be like if these groups--a few of which legit resemble Islamist terror cells--put out a call for what is their version of jihad right now. propublica.org/article/severa…
For some context: the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen holds military-style training camps they call “Doomsday Hatecamps.” Members are organized in cells scattered across the country, and they are said to be actively seeking military and law enforcement recruits. splcenter.org/fighting-hate/…
In just a few years, Atomwaffen members were arrested for five murders as well as a plot to blow up a nuclear facility. Before it was taken down, the group’s website boasted of hosting "hand-to-hand, arms training and various other forms of training." tampabay.com/news/courts/cr…
Read 9 tweets
8 Jan
This debate over whether to call an attempt to take hostages and blow people up terrorism is confusing me. I’m not a lawyer, so I’m not arguing the legal angle (though @hoffman_bruce makes a good case for it here). I think white terrorism should be taken as seriously as Islamist.
We know white supremacist terrorism is the greater threat now. So why do we talk about it differently than Islamist terrorism? Why is it covered differently in the news, as was on full display at the capitol? Why are we so unprepared to deal with it? csis.org/analysis/escal…
I agree the word “terrorism” is a shitty label that has adversely impacted people of color. But it’s not going away, and I think it’s past time to apply it to white supremacists the same way we would Islamists. Because this is what happens when we don’t: nytimes.com/2018/11/03/mag…
Read 5 tweets
7 Jan
I feel like people think I'm just idly tweeting about using the word "terrorist" to describe some of the men who stormed the capitol--the ones with weapons, zip-ties for hostages and explosives. I've interviewed dozens of designated terrorists. For my job. sulomeanderson.com/stories/
I insist on this point because A) that's what we would call them if they were Arab and B) because if we don't use the right wording, if we continue to downplay this kind of violence and intimidation by white extremists, they will continue to exploit that, and people will die.
The men we saw at the capitol yesterday were not the worst of these kinds of domestic terrorists, who behave in ways barely distinguishable from Islamist terrorists. For a little primer, here's a @washingtonpost piece of mine about online radicalization. washingtonpost.com/news/postevery…
Read 6 tweets
6 Jan
Well kudos to everyone who has been downplaying or dismissing the threat of White ISIS for years.
Seriously, congrats to the Very Serious People who thought it was “hysterical” to be worried about ARMED WHITE SUPREMACIST MILITIAS IN THE STREETS ffs. At least you weren’t hysterical.
A toast is also due to the DC and NYC journalists who smugly ignored what their foreign correspondent and conflict reporter colleagues have been pointing at for many months now as evidence the political environment in the U.S. is spiraling out of control. Maybe listen next time.
Read 4 tweets
19 Dec 20
At some point, all reporters miss things they should have caught. This is one of mine. I wrote this @TheAtlantic story in 2014 about abuse at wilderness programs for troubled teens. I visited a program called Redcliff Ascent in Utah, here @TroubledKidHelp. theatlantic.com/health/archive…
The situation at Redcliff was not one I would have wanted to end up in as a teenager, but the landscape was stunningly beautiful, and I was being shown around by a very nice and sincere man, who truly seemed to mean well. His sincerity made me miss what I should not have.
I had heard horrific stories of abuse at other camps, but staff at Redcliff introduced me to kids who seemed healthy and, if not happy, at least not being tortured. I opened with an anecdote about a red-faced, heavy-set girl I never spoke with, who was crying to go home.
Read 8 tweets

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